Two Atlanta teens obsessed with the 1999 Columbine High School shooting were each sentenced 40 years, 20 of which would be served in prison, Tuesday after allegedly plotting to blow up their own high school.

BREAKING: two teens who pleaded guilty to plotting an attack on Etowah High School in 2017 sentenced to 40 years in prison. 20 to serve. @wsbtvpic.twitter.com/BLb6ZTPGum

Alfred Dupree, 19, and Victoria McCurley, 18, were arrested in October 2017 and pleaded guilty on Friday to conspiracy to commit murder among other charges, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Tuesday. The two attended Etowah High School in Woodstock, Georgia, and were in custody since 2017.

The other 20 years would be served on probation, according to 11 Alive.

Investigators found journals with a “kill list” in Dupree’s home and explosives and weapons in McCurley’s house. Special education students and their teacher were allegedly the specific targets, AJC reported.

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“I envision us moving into the 5,000 foot building from the East Wing, individually throwing down smoke bombs and picking people off as some of the smoke fills the halls, fills the air to begin throwing explosives off a crowd still in sight,” one passage from a journal read, according to AJC.

“We should think about setting up more bombs, though, I just want to kill as many people as I can,” another said.

While Dupree and McCurley had access to guns, Cherokee Sheriff Frank Reynolds said the students were more likely to use a flammable device against school staff, AJC reported.

The sentencing comes as STEM School Highlands Ranch near Columbine experienced a shooting May 7.

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